2021 -- H 6338 | |
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LC002829 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2021 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE EDUCATION EQUITY AND PROPERTY TAX | |
RELIEF ACT -- CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION FUNDING | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Fellela, Amore, Cardillo, and Costantino | |
Date Introduced: May 13, 2021 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 16-7.2-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-7.2 entitled "The |
2 | Education Equity and Property Tax Relief Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 16-7.2-5. Charter public schools, the William M. Davies, Jr. Career and Technical |
4 | High School, and the Metropolitan Regional Career and Technical Center. |
5 | (a) Charter public schools, as defined in chapter 77 of this title, the William M. Davies, Jr. |
6 | Career and Technical High School (Davies), and the Metropolitan Regional Career and Technical |
7 | Center (the Met Center) shall be funded solely by the state, pursuant to § 16-7.2-3. If the October |
8 | 1 actual enrollment data for any charter public school shows a ten percent (10%) or greater change |
9 | from the prior year enrollment which is used as the reference year average daily membership, the |
10 | last six (6) monthly payments to the charter public school will be adjusted to reflect actual |
11 | enrollment. The state share of the permanent foundation education aid shall be paid by the state |
12 | directly to the charter public schools, Davies, and the Met Center pursuant to § 16-7.2-9 and shall |
13 | be calculated using the state-share ratio of the district of residence of the student as set forth in § |
14 | 16-7.2-4. The department of elementary and secondary education shall provide the general |
15 | assembly with the calculation of the state share of permanent foundation education aid for charter |
16 | public schools delineated by school district. |
17 | (b) The local share of education funding shall be paid to the charter public school, Davies, |
18 | and the Met Center by the district of residence of the student and shall be the local, per-pupil cost |
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1 | calculated by dividing the local appropriation to education from property taxes, net of debt service, |
2 | and capital projects, as defined in the uniform chart of accounts by the average daily membership |
3 | for each city and town, pursuant to § 16-7-22, for the reference year calculated for reference |
4 | purposes only and any amount so determined shall be paid by the state. |
5 | (c) Beginning in FY 2017, there shall be a reduction to the local per pupil funding paid by |
6 | cost calculated for reference purposes only to be assessed to the district of residence to charter |
7 | public schools, Davies, and the Met Center. This reduction shall be equal to the greater (i) Of seven |
8 | percent (7%) of the local, per-pupil funding of the district of residence pursuant to subsection (b) |
9 | or (ii) The per-pupil value of the district's costs for non-public textbooks, transportation for non- |
10 | public students, retiree health benefits, out-of-district special-education tuition and transportation, |
11 | services for students age eighteen (18) to twenty-one (21) years old, pre-school screening and |
12 | intervention, and career and technical education, tuition and transportation costs, debt service and |
13 | rental costs minus the average expenses incurred by charter schools for those same categories of |
14 | expenses as reported in the uniform chart of accounts for the prior preceding fiscal year pursuant |
15 | to § 16-7-16(11) and verified by the department of elementary and secondary education. In the case |
16 | where audited financials result in a change in the calculation after the first tuition payment is made, |
17 | the remaining payments shall be based on the most recent audited data. For those districts whose |
18 | greater reduction occurs under the calculation of (ii), there shall be an additional reduction to |
19 | payments to mayoral academies with teachers who do not participate in the state teacher's |
20 | retirement system under chapter 8 of title 36 equal to the per-pupil value of teacher retirement costs |
21 | attributable to unfunded liability as calculated by the state's actuary for the prior preceding fiscal |
22 | year. |
23 | (d) Local district payments to charter public schools, Davies, and the Met Center for each |
24 | district's students enrolled in these schools shall be made on a quarterly basis in July, October, |
25 | January, and April; however, the first local-district payment shall be made by August 15, instead |
26 | of July. Failure of the community to make the local-district payment for its student(s) enrolled in a |
27 | charter public school, Davies, and/or the Met Center may result in the withholding of state |
28 | education aid pursuant to § 16-7-31. |
29 | (e) Beginning in FY 2017, school districts with charter public school, Davies, and the Met |
30 | Center enrollment, that, combined, comprise five percent (5%) or more of the average daily |
31 | membership as defined in § 16-7-22, shall receive additional aid for a period of three (3) years. Aid |
32 | in FY 2017 shall be equal to the number of charter public school, open-enrollment schools, Davies, |
33 | or the Met Center students as of the reference year as defined in § 16-7-16 times a per-pupil amount |
34 | of one hundred seventy-five dollars ($175). Aid in FY 2018 shall be equal to the number of charter |
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1 | public school, open-enrollment schools, Davies, or the Met Center students as of the reference year |
2 | as defined in § 16-7-16 times a per-pupil amount of one hundred dollars ($100). Aid in FY 2019 |
3 | shall be equal to the number of charter public school, open-enrollment schools, Davies, or the Met |
4 | Center students as of the reference year as defined in § 16-7-16 times a per-pupil amount of fifty |
5 | dollars ($50.00). The additional aid shall be used to offset the adjusted fixed costs retained by the |
6 | districts of residence. |
7 | SECTION 2. Sections 16-45-6 and 16-45-6.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-45 entitled |
8 | "Regional Vocational Schools [See Title 16 Chapter 97 - The Rhode Island Board of Education |
9 | Act]" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
10 | 16-45-6. Powers additional to previous authority. |
11 | (a) The powers delegated and authorized in this chapter for the board of regents for |
12 | elementary and secondary education and the department of elementary and secondary education |
13 | shall be in addition to those previously authorized by any other general or public law. |
14 | (b) The governance, funding, and programming of the William M. Davies, Jr. vocational |
15 | technical school and the Metropolitan Career and Technical School shall be in accordance with the |
16 | rules and regulations formulated by the board of regents for elementary and secondary education |
17 | pursuant to chapter 35 of title 42. Provided, however, the additional appropriation by the General |
18 | Assembly in fiscal year 2005 for the William M. Davies, Jr. Vocational Technical School shall be |
19 | used to fund sixty (60) additional placements. Forty (40) of those placements shall be made |
20 | available to students from the City of Providence. |
21 | (c) The purpose of this chapter is to restructure the system of career and technical schools |
22 | in Rhode Island for the benefit of the students, the economy, and the general welfare. The |
23 | paramount aim is to enable the schools to make more significant contributions in providing the |
24 | state's students with the career preparation they need to compete and succeed in the world of today |
25 | and of the future. To ensure student success, a system of model career and technical schools will |
26 | be established and supported. These schools will provide: integrated academic and vocational |
27 | curricula, up to date technology, programs to meet the varying needs of all students, and strong |
28 | links to business, industry, postsecondary education, and the community. |
29 | (d)(1) There shall be a system of state operated career and technical schools serving |
30 | geographic areas of the state. Students attending these regional schools will do so on a full time |
31 | basis with the costs for their education at the regional school being shared by the state and the |
32 | district of residence as described in § 16-7.2-5 the sole responsibility of the state which costs shall |
33 | also include transportation costs necessary to carry out the purposes of this section. State schools |
34 | currently participating in the state retirement system that are not receiving reimbursement pursuant |
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1 | to § 16-16-22 shall have their state aid adjusted to reflect full reimbursement for expenses related |
2 | to employer retirement contributions for those staff employed by the state. |
3 | (2) These schools shall be operated as local education agencies and each shall be governed |
4 | by a board of trustees. With the exception of those powers and duties reserved by the director, the |
5 | commissioner of elementary and secondary education, and the board of regents for elementary and |
6 | secondary education, the board of trustees shall have the powers and duties of school committees. |
7 | The Davies school shall be the first school operated under the provisions of this chapter and shall |
8 | be renamed the William M. Davies, Jr. career and technical high school. The Metropolitan Career |
9 | and Technical School shall be the second school operated under the provisions of this chapter. |
10 | (e)(1) The board of regents for elementary and secondary education shall appoint the |
11 | members of the board of trustees from nominations made by the commissioner of elementary and |
12 | secondary education. The chairperson shall also be selected in this manner. The board of regents |
13 | shall determine the number, qualifications, and terms of office of members of the board of trustees. |
14 | The board of trustees will be broadly representative of the local communities served by each school |
15 | and the larger statewide workforce interests. |
16 | (2) The board of regents shall establish strategic directions for the career and technical |
17 | education system that are consistent with the state's economic development plans, workforce |
18 | requirements, and educational priorities and learner outcomes established by the board of regents. |
19 | (3) The board of regents shall provide parameters for the overall budget requests, approve |
20 | the budget, and participate in budget development as required in subsection (i). |
21 | (f)(1) The commissioner of elementary and secondary education shall recommend |
22 | parameters for the overall budget requests, recommend a budget and participate in budget |
23 | development as required in subsection (i). |
24 | (2) The commissioner shall approve the process for selection of a director of each regional |
25 | school. The commissioner shall develop a plan for statewide implementation of the provisions of |
26 | this chapter. |
27 | (g) The board of trustees shall meet monthly and serve without compensation. Nine (9) |
28 | members of the board of trustees shall be required to attend teacher appeal hearings conducted |
29 | pursuant to § 16-13-4. The board of trustees shall have broad policy making authority for the |
30 | operation of the school consistent with subsection (e) and the following powers and duties: |
31 | (1) To identify the educational needs of the communities in the district. |
32 | (2) To develop educational policies to meet the needs of students in the communities served |
33 | by the school district. |
34 | (3) To appoint a director of its regional school to serve as its chief executive officer and to |
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1 | approve assistant and associate directors from nominations made by the director. |
2 | (4) To provide policy guidance and participate in budget development as required in |
3 | subsection (i). |
4 | (5) To develop staffing policies which ensure that all students are taught by educators of |
5 | the highest possible quality. |
6 | (h)(1) The director will serve at the pleasure of the board of trustees with the initial |
7 | appointment to be for a period of not more than three (3) years, provided, that the term and |
8 | conditions of employment are subject to the approval of the board of regents for elementary and |
9 | secondary education. |
10 | (2) It is the responsibility of the director to manage and operate the school on a day to day |
11 | basis. The director's duties shall include the following: |
12 | (i) To be responsible for the entire care, supervision, and management of the career and |
13 | technical high school. |
14 | (ii) To recommend to the board of trustees educational policies to meet the needs of the |
15 | district, and to implement policies established by the board of trustees. |
16 | (iii) To present nominations to the board of trustees for assistant and associate directors |
17 | and to appoint all other school personnel. |
18 | (iv) To provide for the evaluation of all school district personnel. |
19 | (v) To establish a school based management approach for decision making for the operation |
20 | of the school. |
21 | (vi) To prepare a budget and participate in budget development as required in subsection |
22 | (i), and to authorize purchases consistent with the adopted school district budget. |
23 | (vii) To report to the board of trustees on a regular basis the financial condition and |
24 | operation of the school, and to report annually on the educational progress of the school. |
25 | (viii) To establish appropriate advisory committees as needed to provide guidance on new |
26 | directions and feedback on the operation of the school. |
27 | (i) With policy guidance from the board of trustees and extensive involvement of the |
28 | administrators and faculty in the school, the director of each regional school shall annually prepare |
29 | a budget. The board of trustees will approve the budget and transmit it to the commissioner. The |
30 | board of regents for elementary and secondary education, upon recommendation of the |
31 | commissioner of elementary and secondary education, shall provide parameters for the overall |
32 | budget request. Based on review and recommendation by the commissioner, the board of regents |
33 | shall approve the total budget and incorporate it into its budget request to the governor and to the |
34 | general assembly. Line item budgeting decisions shall be the responsibility of the director. |
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1 | (j) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to limit or interfere with the rights of teachers |
2 | and other school employees to bargain collectively pursuant to chapters 9.3 and 9.4 of title 28 or to |
3 | allow the board of trustees or the director to abrogate any agreement by collective bargaining. |
4 | Employees at the William M. Davies school shall continue to be state employees and the bargaining |
5 | units which are presently established at the school shall remain intact. |
6 | (k) Any tuition payments, which are made to the William M. Davies Career and Technical |
7 | high school from the district of residence of its students, as authorized in R.I.G.L. § 16-7.2-5, shall |
8 | be deposited into a restricted receipt account to be used for the same educational purposes that its |
9 | state appropriation is used. Any such funds shall be exempt from the indirect cost recovery |
10 | provisions of § 35-4-7. |
11 | 16-45-6.1. Career and technical education. |
12 | (a) The general assembly finds that career and technical education programs that meet |
13 | rigorous industry standards and prepare Rhode Island's students to succeed in a wide variety of |
14 | employment settings are a critical component of the state's public education system and a necessary |
15 | element of the state's economic development. |
16 | (b) The general assembly further finds that the proportion of students now enrolled in such |
17 | programs is inadequate. Therefore, all Rhode Island school districts shall file a plan with the |
18 | Commissioner of Elementary and Secondary Education no later than January 1, 2006 setting forth |
19 | the means through which no fewer than forty (40) percent of their students enrolled in grades nine |
20 | (9) through twelve (12) shall be provided the opportunity to enroll in career and technical |
21 | programming that is certified by the Rhode Island Department of Education as meeting industry |
22 | standards by September 2007. |
23 | (c) To facilitate the development of additional career and technical program offerings for |
24 | Rhode Island students that meet industry standards the department of elementary and secondary |
25 | education shall, in furtherance of the reports and studies that have been developed since 2000 |
26 | setting forth recommendations for an updated system of career and technical education for the State |
27 | of Rhode Island, develop a system design that includes site assessments of all current career and |
28 | technical programs and sets forth standards and procedures for the department of elementary and |
29 | secondary education to approve programs that are developed in cooperation with business, industry |
30 | and postsecondary institutions. The department shall also develop a system design for three |
31 | additional state operated career and technical schools, in addition to the William H. Davies School |
32 | and the Metropolitan Career and Technical Center, including recommendations for a model for the |
33 | siting, building costs, operational costs and program design for each such school. The general |
34 | assembly shall appropriate funds to the department for purposes of their completion of the system |
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1 | design for the statewide program approval process to industry standards and the development of |
2 | the models, siting and program design of the three additional state operated career and technical |
3 | schools. |
4 | (d) Students enrolled in a career and technical (CTE) board of trustees approved career and |
5 | technical (CTE) program outside their district of residence that are not located within their |
6 | transportation region may enroll in such programs and their district of residence shall not be |
7 | responsible for costs of transportation. |
8 | (e) Notwithstanding the provisions of chapters 7 and 7.2 of title 16, the per pupil cost of a |
9 | student attending a career and technical (CTE) program outside their district shall be borne |
10 | exclusively by the state. |
11 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- THE EDUCATION EQUITY AND PROPERTY TAX | |
RELIEF ACT -- CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION FUNDING | |
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1 | This act would require that the state be solely responsible for the costs of students enrolled |
2 | in career and technical education (CTE) and vocational programs outside their district. |
3 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC002829 | |
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